Salt Mines

November 5, 2017

Salt Mines

1470 Bay Blvd.
Chula Vista, CA 91911

Phone: (619) 423-3388
32.600807, -117.092564

Dog-Friendly: Yes Kid-Friendly: Yes

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From Wikipedia: This is the second-longest running business in San Diego, behind the San Diego Union Tribune. Initially the operation began as the La Punta Salt Company. Records date it back to at least 1871, while another sources state that the area has been used as a salt works as early as the 1860s. It has been in operation since the 1870s, when the city first experienced the effects of the Industrial Revolution. In 1883, the salt works were the only salt producer in the United States, supplying the salt needs of all of Southern California. Around the turn of the 20th century, the salt works were the only industrial employment in the Chula Vista area, other than produce packing plants.

In 1902, La Punta Salt Works was purchased, and renamed to Western Salt Company. In the 1910s, about forty thousand tons of salt were harvested annually from the salt works. In 1915, a narrow-gauge railway was installed, and crossed over standard-gauge rail of the San Diego and Arizona Railway; the narrow-gauge railway was dismantled in the 1970s, except for where it crossed over standard-gauge rail, preserving the only instance of such an occurrence in the United States.

In 1916, operations were disrupted due to flooding; the flood destroyed the salt ponds and the salt works built up to that point. In 1918, reconstruction began due to damage caused during the 1916 flooding, finally reaching completion in the 1950s. After the 1910s, other salt producers in San Diego County closed, leaving the salt works the sole salt producer in the county.

In the 1920s another company, California Chemical Corporation, extracted bromine from the waters from the salt ponds. In addition the company also produced magnesium chloride, beginning as early as the 1910s. Production of bromine ended after World War II.

During the majority of the 20th century, amount of salt harvested at the salt works remained relatively constant. Joined by other salt producers in the state, the salt works was the second largest salt producer in California. As late as 1978, the salt works supplied the salt needs of San Diego’s tuna fleet. In 1999, the salt ponds were sold to the San Diego County Regional Airport Authority, transferring the salt ponds to the United States Fish and Wildlife Service; both have leased it out for continued salt harvesting.

The leasers are a company formed by former employers of Western Salt Company, who changed the name to its present name, maintaining the buildings as private property of the salt works itself. In 2005, right of way of the former Coronado Belt Line in the salt pools, were designated historic by the city of San Diego; later converted into a bike path as part of the “Bayshore Bikeway”, despite the historic designation. In 2009, the city of San Diego claimed land use authority over the property.

On the West Coast of the United States, only San Francisco Bay and San Diego Bay have the natural conditions where salt extraction from sea salt is feasible. Water evaporated at the salt works come from the ocean, not the bay. The salt works produces about 75,000 tons of salt every year from salt ponds that cover over a thousand acres of land

Since 1999, operations began at the salt works, more than a million and a half tons of salt have been harvested. Gypsum can also be sourced from the salt works, as was done in a 2008 study of the mineral. Magnesium chloride, is also produced during the process of the solar salt operation, and is sold for industrial use. In 2005, the salt works employed twenty-two people.

Since 1999, the parcel which the salt works is on has been owned the San Diego Regional Airport Authority, leased to the South Bay Salt Works company. In 2015, the Airport Authority planned to sell the land which the salt works are on to the San Diego Foundation, to mitigate the building of a substation by San Diego Gas & Electric.

It is planned that when the lease on the land ends, the buildings will be re-purposed similar to those on Cannery Row. One possible use previously proposed is to convert the salt works into an interpretive center for the United States Fish and Wildlife Service; that usage has been supported by multiple regional politicians and organizations.

Personal Experience: This is a very quick adventure unless you somehow manage to talk to staff here and they let you tour the place. We just admired it through the gate, snapped a few photos and were on our way. Still, really cool to see in person. I’d like to come here during one of our magnificent sunsets.

There are two ways to appreciate the salt mines. One requires driving right up to them, the other requires hiking. The first few photos are from the point of view that you drive up to: